Summary A Political History of the World - History of International Relations (000761)
Summary Europe - 3000 years of history
All for this textbook (33)
Written for
Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB)
Bachelor Of Social Sciences- Orientation
History of International Relations
All documents for this subject (1)
Seller
Follow
lotusli
Reviews received
Content preview
History of International Relations
Introduction: Why history matters
Class 1 – sept 28:
GRADING
2/20 = seminars
18/20 = 100% WRITTEN exam!
5 close questions + open questions
Geography test: Online!
Dates to memorize? → those on slides! Memorize all slides perfectly: already get OK grades.
= example of open exam question. 1st: always start with main summary (see pt.1), 2) geography: says
‘no detail’ → Indian is subcontinent merged into Indian ocean, north Himalaya, south of Himalaya
Hindu-Gangetic plains, hills and mountains in between and around coast: cities and states throughout
history. → then important steps: 3) Vedic age, 4) Mahjanapadas, 5) Maurya, etc. up until arrival of EU
colonists. ➔ should be able to do this in 5mins! → then give conclusions & make links with India today,
etc. work VERY structured!!
Peace and war = core business of world politics.
At tipping point: 1) cosmopolitans 2) nationalists
1) After collapse SU (1991): EU: lead by example rather than by force | China: doctrine of peaceful rice
| US: liberal foreign policy → thought power politics & great wars have ended.
2) globalization (migrants & multinationals) = threat. → Shift: group grows
Meanwhile shift: military spending > Cold war.
1
,History: focus = Europe → outside: claim own strategic culture totally different from EU politics (e.g.
China: harmonious tradition | India: Gandhi: peace principle). → geographical limitation history =
misunderstanding
Writing history
UNDERSTAND ALL LAYERS WELL
S37: Holslag: aims book to combine all these different but interrelated layers:
S38: 1) Distribution of power: polity: influence over citizens (internal) & other polities (external).
Power = 1) inputs/capabilities (land & natural resources, military, political system…) → not static, but
shapes balance of power between polities 2) outputs/effective influence.
S39: 2) political organization: all kinds, and although state seemed to become irrelevant:
nationalism!
S40: 3) interaction between political units: why often stated IR become peaceful but war > peace.
S41: 4) relationship between people and the planet: global warming, food scarcity…
S42: 5) evolution of nature of world politics: after 1991: liberals: optimism, need democracy &
interdependence = no war. Constructivists: need international norms, NO selfish national interests
BUT focus common good. Realists: polities will always want autonomy, security… → peace &
corporation = unlikely. Idealists: institutions, cooperation, peace is possible & necessary.
→ shift from optimist idealism to pessimist realism.
Book: 3000 years, 1st millennium BCE until 21stC. Each chapter = 2-3 centuries, focus: most important
region. SO: sub-Saharan Africa & Americas: less focus.
Chapter 1: Heavens Obscured - The prelude: before 1000 BCE
Prior 1000 BCE = transition Bronze to Iron age = 1st period with widespread written evidence on foreign
relations. = in most primitive incarnation, e.g. among tribes = the natural state.
Then: shift to 1st cities, etc. End in 4 centres of political power: 1) Egypt, 2) fertile crescent of
Mesopotamia, 3) North China Plain, 4) Indo-Gangetic Plain.
1 Worlds apart
2 worlds/geopolitical complexes: 1) Eastern Hemisphere (Africa, Asia, Eu) 2) Western hemisphere
(Americas). → separate: no permanent trade until 16 thC.
1) cradle of civilization: Alpide Belt = mountain chain with perfect conditions for permanent human
settlement.
2) far later inhabited: at most: fruitful Mississippi.
Natural potential often NOT used effectively → Why? → only 60 million people = emptiness, AND
distributed unevenly.
Family clans: main social unit. Largest cities only 100,000.
= peace or war?
1) Rousseau: cooperation necessary to survive → evidence confirmed: tribes less fights than
developed societies because life = too precious. Messengers = privilege to cross borders. BUT
2) also war: scarce evidence: metal weapons (= symbols masculinity), women as slaves, mass graves
→ warfare before Iron Age often led to extermination of entire communities.
Causes? → theft of livestock, abduct women, competition natural resources, rivalry for leadership…
BUT aware of value of life.
3 Bringer of Spoils (= name for ‘Kings’)
Late 2nd millennium = minor kingdoms & trading cities = similar as tribes BUT more evidence: Homer:
Fortified cities in perpetual competition for wealth, power & honour.
Important in early interstate relations: marriage as diplomatic partnerships. Messengers: treaties
based on oaths.
IR Ugarit (between Egypt & Mesopotamia): controlling trade, formed alliances, economic warfare
avant la lettre. BUT: collapse (by ‘Sea Peoples’), also Hattusha (capital of Hittites) → led to Dark ages
of the Eastern Mediterranean (1200-1000BCE) = begin of Bronze Age collapse. Cause: environmental
crisis, drought, mass migration-turned invasion, collapse of trade.
Treaty of Kadesh (1259) – world oldest peace treaty between Hittites & Egypt. BUT 1180: Hittites went
down.
4 Egypt
Agricultural centre, 1st imperial tradition because fertility: granary = power. 2 harvests/year. 3-4
million people around River Nile & its delta. BUT: disease & other: died before 30, periods of instability
& subjugation by foreign invaders. Egypt for outsiders was the ultimate trophy → most important for
rulers was to provide security, stability & harmony (meant hierarchy) = ‘Maat’. Clear Egyptian
supremacy over inferior kings AND subjects.
BUT: descent from golden age: anarchy & war fatigue arose from 13thC. Fatal blow: 10thC: Chief of
Libya – a foreign dynasty - became pharaoh of Egypt.
BUT imperial interpretation of Maat always lived on: conquerors preferred to adopt Egyptian imperial
tradition rather than destroying it.
3
, 5 Mesopotamia (Greek for land between the rivers)
More complex environment & geography. Between Tigris & Euphrates. Conquered by Akkadians,
Sumerians, Babylonians, Assyrians. Governance: against tax abuse income inequality, mistreatment
women… Under King Hammurabi 1750: oldest code of law on property, prisoners & rights of women.
After him, Babylon only downhill. As in Egypt, Iron age came in turmoil: drier climate, mass
migration…
6 China
North China Plain = 400,000km2 fertile land along Yellow river = 5% today’s China (only formed in
18thC). Mostly farmland by Wei & Qi, often war. Decline Shang dynasty, especially millions in battle of
Muye in 1046 → arrival Zhou: king was son of heaven; the centre off the world under heaven → China
= middle kingdom. Peace = goal.
China politics as Mesopotamia & Egypt when start Iron Age.
7 South Asia
Indo-Gangetic plain with rivers Indus, Ganges & Brahmaputra. Until EU colonists 16thC: only nomads
as external threats. Bronze age: Indus Valley = Harappa Civilisation (3000-1300BCE), after: only tribes
& little kingdoms. Slowly, migration/invasion (socially): of Vedic civilisation: foundation Hinduism. =
castes. 1st: anarchy, until 5thC: 1 state hegemony over neighbours, 4thC: large part subcontinent under
control 1 empire: Maurya.
Harmony = goddess of fortune, Lakshmi & husband Vishnu of peace & justice. Yet, often war.
4
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller lotusli. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $6.95. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.